EP0814091A2 - Monoclonal antiboby specifically reactive to a human growth hormone with a molecular weight of about 20,000 for use in an immunoassay - Google Patents

Monoclonal antiboby specifically reactive to a human growth hormone with a molecular weight of about 20,000 for use in an immunoassay Download PDF

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Publication number
EP0814091A2
EP0814091A2 EP97304247A EP97304247A EP0814091A2 EP 0814091 A2 EP0814091 A2 EP 0814091A2 EP 97304247 A EP97304247 A EP 97304247A EP 97304247 A EP97304247 A EP 97304247A EP 0814091 A2 EP0814091 A2 EP 0814091A2
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Prior art keywords
hgh
antibody
monoclonal antibody
immunoassay
enzyme
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EP97304247A
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German (de)
French (fr)
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EP0814091A3 (en
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Ichiro Ikeda
Naoko Kono
Tadashi Makino
Yoshihide Hashimoto
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Bayer Pharma AG
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Schering AG
Mitsui Toatsu Chemicals Inc
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Publication of EP0814091A2 publication Critical patent/EP0814091A2/en
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    • GPHYSICS
    • G01MEASURING; TESTING
    • G01NINVESTIGATING OR ANALYSING MATERIALS BY DETERMINING THEIR CHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL PROPERTIES
    • G01N33/00Investigating or analysing materials by specific methods not covered by groups G01N1/00 - G01N31/00
    • G01N33/48Biological material, e.g. blood, urine; Haemocytometers
    • G01N33/50Chemical analysis of biological material, e.g. blood, urine; Testing involving biospecific ligand binding methods; Immunological testing
    • G01N33/53Immunoassay; Biospecific binding assay; Materials therefor
    • G01N33/563Immunoassay; Biospecific binding assay; Materials therefor involving antibody fragments
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C07ORGANIC CHEMISTRY
    • C07KPEPTIDES
    • C07K16/00Immunoglobulins [IGs], e.g. monoclonal or polyclonal antibodies
    • C07K16/18Immunoglobulins [IGs], e.g. monoclonal or polyclonal antibodies against material from animals or humans
    • C07K16/26Immunoglobulins [IGs], e.g. monoclonal or polyclonal antibodies against material from animals or humans against hormones ; against hormone releasing or inhibiting factors
    • GPHYSICS
    • G01MEASURING; TESTING
    • G01NINVESTIGATING OR ANALYSING MATERIALS BY DETERMINING THEIR CHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL PROPERTIES
    • G01N33/00Investigating or analysing materials by specific methods not covered by groups G01N1/00 - G01N31/00
    • G01N33/48Biological material, e.g. blood, urine; Haemocytometers
    • G01N33/50Chemical analysis of biological material, e.g. blood, urine; Testing involving biospecific ligand binding methods; Immunological testing
    • G01N33/53Immunoassay; Biospecific binding assay; Materials therefor
    • G01N33/543Immunoassay; Biospecific binding assay; Materials therefor with an insoluble carrier for immobilising immunochemicals
    • G01N33/54306Solid-phase reaction mechanisms
    • GPHYSICS
    • G01MEASURING; TESTING
    • G01NINVESTIGATING OR ANALYSING MATERIALS BY DETERMINING THEIR CHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL PROPERTIES
    • G01N33/00Investigating or analysing materials by specific methods not covered by groups G01N1/00 - G01N31/00
    • G01N33/48Biological material, e.g. blood, urine; Haemocytometers
    • G01N33/50Chemical analysis of biological material, e.g. blood, urine; Testing involving biospecific ligand binding methods; Immunological testing
    • G01N33/74Chemical analysis of biological material, e.g. blood, urine; Testing involving biospecific ligand binding methods; Immunological testing involving hormones or other non-cytokine intercellular protein regulatory factors such as growth factors, including receptors to hormones and growth factors
    • GPHYSICS
    • G01MEASURING; TESTING
    • G01NINVESTIGATING OR ANALYSING MATERIALS BY DETERMINING THEIR CHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL PROPERTIES
    • G01N2333/00Assays involving biological materials from specific organisms or of a specific nature
    • G01N2333/435Assays involving biological materials from specific organisms or of a specific nature from animals; from humans
    • G01N2333/575Hormones
    • G01N2333/61Growth hormones [GH] (Somatotropin)
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10STECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10S530/00Chemistry: natural resins or derivatives; peptides or proteins; lignins or reaction products thereof
    • Y10S530/808Materials and products related to genetic engineering or hybrid or fused cell technology, e.g. hybridoma, monoclonal products
    • Y10S530/809Fused cells, e.g. hybridoma

Definitions

  • This invention relates to a monoclonal antibody utilized in an assay of a human growth hormone with a molecular weight of about 20,000; a cell line capable of producing the monoclonal antibody; and a sensitive immunoassay of a human growth hormone with a molecular weight of about 20,000 by means of the monoclonal antibody.
  • hGH human growth hormones
  • 22k hGH peptide hormones with a molecular weight of about 22,000
  • 20k hGH a protein with 176 amino acids
  • Both 20k hGH and 22k hGH are proteins originally encoded in a single gene, and are, therefore, very similar in their amino acid sequences, except for a difference that 20k hGH has a structure with a deletion of 15 amino acids of 32 nd to 46 th from the N-terminus of 22k hGH.
  • hGH level is below about 5 ng/mL as a baseline level in the morning.
  • the blood level of the hGHs varies constantly and largely, i.e., significantly varies within a day and increases during exercise or sleeping.
  • the above findings for the quantitative ratio between 20k hGH and 22k hGH have been obtained by measuring hGHs extracted from a human pituitary. Therefore, the quantitative ratio between them in their natural secretion dynamics in a human body is still unknown and whether it varies in a short time is also unknown.
  • 22k hGH has been marketed, and has been studied more intensively than 20k hGH.
  • hGHs The determination methods of hGHs will be described. There are several known determination methods for hGHs in human blood or urine to explicate biological roles of hGHs (e.g., Hashida and Ishikawa et al., Clinica. Chimica. Acta, 162 , 229-235(1987)).
  • hGHs it is essential for developing hGHs as a drug that an accurate secretion dyanamics is determined in a clinical trial, including a baseline blood level of hGHs in a human body.
  • the determination method is required to be sensitive with no errors.
  • the known immunoassays for 20k hGH are as follows.
  • a monoclonal antibody specific to 20k hGH has been disclosed by Mario Mellado, et al. (Journal of Clinica Endocrinology and Metabolism, 81 , 1613-1618(1996)), who describes that cross-reactivity to 22k hGH is below 1 %, and does not demonstrate an actual example of determination of 20k hGH in human body fluid. As discussed later, it is impossible in theory to elucidate the secretion dynamics in a human body of 20k hGH using the monoclonal antibody of this article.
  • Cross-reactivity is a phenomenon observed when an epitope reactive to an antibody is also reactive to another antibody.
  • the cross-reactivity should be taken into consideration in an immunoassay for 22k hGH.
  • 22k hGH is contained in blood much more than 20k hGH (5 to 20 times).
  • 22k hGH has a unique sequence consisting of 15 amino acids. Therefore, if a monoclonal antibody capable of recognizing the unique sequence as an epitope could be prepared, a monoclonal antibody which may specifically react with 22k hGH and be adequately sensitive would be readily prepared.
  • 20k hGH is much less than 22k hGH in blood (1/5 to 1/20). This simply means that a sensitive immunoassay for 20k hGH is required to has a sensitivity 10 times higher than a sensitive immunoassay for 22k hGH. Furthermore, cross-reactivity to 22k hGH significantly affects the precision in the measurement.
  • 20k hGH is different from 22k hGH in that it does not have a unique amino acid sequence. If anything, the ligation segment between the termini of the deletion of the 15 amino acids from 22k hGH, i.e., the sequence wherein 31 st phenylalanine and 32 nd asparagine (47 th amino acid from N-terminus in 22k hGH) from N-terminus are adjacent to each other, might be considered to be a unique amino acid sequence in 20k hGH.
  • Lewis et al have immunized an animal with a polypeptide coupled with albumin containing a region in the vicinity of the amino acid sequence (an amino acid sequence of 28 th to 38 th from N-terminus of 20k hGH) and attempted to prepare a monoclonal antibody recognizing the polypeptide as an epitope, but have been unsuccessful (Lewis U.J. et al, Endocrinol Japon, Vol.34, pp.73-85(1987)).
  • 20k hGH has not been commercially available and there are few methods for its preparation. In such a situation, it is difficult to obtain 20k hGH in an amount to adequately immunize an animal. Before this invention, it has been difficult to adequately immunize an animal with 20k hGH for preparing antibody-producing cells. Consequently, it has been quite difficult to obtain cells producing the desired monoclonal antibody.
  • Mellado et al. describe that the measuring sensitivity of the immunoassay is 4 ng/mL. Since a peak level of 20k hGH in human blood is about 1 ng/mL for a normal adult, the immunoassay described by Mellado et al. can never determine the baseline blood level of 20k hGH. In other words, this method can never elucidate the secretion dynamics of 20k hGH in human blood.
  • Mellado et al. have not solved the above problems of cross-reactivity and sensitivity in an immunoassay for 20k hGH. That is, the monoclonal antibody described by Mellado et al. and the immunoassay therewith cannot be applied to a clinical study for development of 20k hGH as a drug.
  • this invention provides a sensitive immunoassay for 20k hGH which is useful in development of 20k hGH as a drug, can determine the baseline blood level of 20k hGH, and can allow us to elucidate the secretion dynamics of 20k hGH.
  • the present invention seeks to provide a monoclonal antibody which is specifically reactive to 20k hGH, but substantially unreactive to 22k hGH and its preparation process; a cell line capable of producing the antibody; and an immunoassay for 20k hGH using the antibody which can accurately and directly quantify 20k hGH in human blood.
  • the inventors have attempted to prepare the desired monoclonal antibody, improving the followings to solve the above problems.
  • This invention provides a monoclonal antibody which is specifically reactive to 20k hGH, but substantially unreactive to 22k hGH; a cell line producing the monoclonal antibody; and an immunoassay for 20k hGH using the monoclonal antibody.
  • This invention provides a cell line producing a monoclonal antibody which is specifically reactive to 20k hGH, but substantially unreactive to 22k hGH.
  • This invention also provides a monoclonal antibody which is specifically reactive to 20k hGH, but substantially unreactive to 22k hGH, and a process for preparation of the monoclonal antibody. Furthermore, this invention provides an immunoassay using the monoclonal antibody of this invention.
  • the monoclonal antibody of this invention has a markedly lower cross-reactivity to 22k hGH and a high affinity to 20k hGH than those of the prior art.
  • the immunoassay using the monoclonal antibody of this invention may be, therefore, an effective means for elucidating the secretion dynamics of 20k hGH, by permitting determination of the baseline blood level of 20k hGH which has not been feasible. Since 20k hGH would be useful as a drug such as a remedy for growth impairment, the immunoassay of this invention is useful for developing 20k hGH as a medicament.
  • Figure 1 shows reactivity of 20k hGH and 22k hGH to the MTC6A monoclonal antibody in a sandwich immunoassay.
  • the hormone 20k hGH with which the monocloal antibody of this invention reacts is a protein comprising 176 amino acids, including those derived from human pituitary and human blood; and those which are produced by a gene recombination technique.
  • 20k hGH there are two types of known 20k hGH in which the 14 th amino acid from N-terminus is serine or methionine, and both of which may be used in this invention.
  • the hormone 22k hGH with which the monoclonal antibody of this invention does not react is a protein comprising 191 amino acids, including those derived from human pituitary and human blood; and those produced by a gene recombination technique.
  • the monoclonal antibody of this invention is one which is specifically reactive to 20k hGH, but substantially unreactive to 22k hGH.
  • a monoclonal antibody which is specifically reactive to 20k hGH, but substantially unreactive to 22k hGH is one which has an extremely low cross-reactivity to 22k hGH and causes a negligible error due to its reactivity to 22k hGH, in determining 20k hGH, e.g., one whose cross-reactivity is below 0.1 %, preferably below 0.03 %, in a sandwich immunoassay illustrated later.
  • the globulin type of the monoclonal antibody of this invention is not restricted as long as it is specifically reactive to 20k hGH, but substantially unreactive to 22k hGH i.e. less than 1% reactive, preferably less than 0.1 reactive; for example, IgG, IgM, IgA, IgE and IgD.
  • the monoclonal antibody of this invention may be prepared from a cell line producing the antibody.
  • the cell line producing the monoclonal antibody of this invention is not restricted as long as it can produce a monoclonal antibody which is specifically reactive to 20k hGH, but substantially unreactive to 22k hGH, and, for example, may be obtained as a hybridoma via a cell fusion of a cell producing an anti-20k hGH antibody with a myeloma cell strain.
  • a hybridoma includes MTC6A strain (FERM BP-5913).
  • a hybridoma cell strain producing a monoclonal antibody which is specifically reactive to 20k hGH, but substantially unreactive to 22k hGH may be prepared by the following cell fusion technique.
  • Antibody-producing cells which may be used in a process for preparing the cell strain of this invention, includes spleen cells, lymphatic node cells and B-lymphocytes.
  • Antigens which may be used include 20k hGH extracted from a pituitary or produced by a gene recombination technique.
  • An immunized animal may be a mammal such as a mouse and a rat.
  • An antigen may be administered to the animal as usual.
  • a suspension or emulsion is prepared with an adjuvant such as complete Freund's adjuvant and incomplete Freund's adjuvant and 20k hGH as an antigen, and is administered several times to an animal, for example, intravenously, subcutaneously, intracutaneously or intraperitoneally, for immunization.
  • an adjuvant such as complete Freund's adjuvant and incomplete Freund's adjuvant and 20k hGH as an antigen
  • an adjuvant such as complete Freund's adjuvant and incomplete Freund's adjuvant and 20k hGH as an antigen
  • a myeloma cell strain which may be used in the cell fusion includes P3X63Ag8, P3U1 and Sp2/0 strains.
  • a fusion accelerator such as polyethylene glycol and Sendai virus may be used in the cell fusion, and the hypoxanthine-aminopterin-thymidine (HAT) medium may be used as usual for selection of a hybridoma after the cell fusion.
  • HAT hypoxanthine-aminopterin-thymidine
  • the hybridoma prepared by the cell fusion is cloned by, for example, a limiting dilution, which is then screened by an immunoassay with 20k hGH and 22k hGH (e.g., JenotropineTM (Sumitomo Pharm.)) to provide a cell line producing a monoclonal antibody which is specifically reactive to 20k hGH, but substantially unreactive to 22k hGH.
  • 20k hGH and 22k hGH e.g., JenotropineTM (Sumitomo Pharm.)
  • the cell strain of this invention is screened by (1) coupling an antibody specifically reactive to a human growth hormone (referred to as "anti-hGH antibody”) to an insoluble carrier to form an hGH-antibody-coupled insoluble carrier, (2) reacting the hGH-antibody-coupled insoluble carrier with 20k hGH to form an anti-hGH antibody - 20k hGH coupling product, (3) reacting the coupling product to the monoclonal antibody in the medium of the above hybridoma to form a complex of anti-hGH antibody - 20k hGH - 20k hGH monoclonal antibody, (4) coupling the complex to an enzyme-labeled antibody to form a complex of anti-hGH antibody - 20k hGH - 20k hGH monoclonal antibody-enzyme-labeled antibody, and (5) determining the activity of the enzyme labeling the antibody using the above complex with the enzyme-labeled antibody to select hybridoma cells.
  • anti-hGH antibody an antibody specifically reactive to a human
  • an anti-hGH antibody is coupled to an insoluble carrier to form an anti-hGH-antibody-coupled insoluble carrier.
  • the insoluble carrier may include a microplate, plastic beads, glass beads and magnetic fine particles.
  • the anti-hGH antibody is one reactive to both 20k hGH and 22k hGH, and may be either monoclonal or polyclonal. It may be preferably an anti-hGH rabbit polyclonal antibody purified by affinity chromatography, specifically F(ab')2 fragment or Fab' fragment to reduce non-specific adsorption.
  • the antibody may be coupled to these insoluble carriers by a known chemical coupling process, but may be adequately coupled by a physical adsorption.
  • the anti-hGH antibody is dissolved in carbonate or phosphate buffer, the above insoluble carrier is added to the solution, the mixture is left at 0 °C to room temperature for at least one hour, and then the mixture is washed with buffer such as Tris-HCl buffer or phosphate buffer containing Tween 20 (polyoxyethylene-sorbital-monolaurate) and sodium azide, to remove uncoupled antibody.
  • buffer such as Tris-HCl buffer or phosphate buffer containing Tween 20 (polyoxyethylene-sorbital-monolaurate) and sodium azide
  • the anti-hGH-antibody-coupled insluble carrier prepared in the first step is reacted with an appropriate amount of 20k hGH, to form an anti-hGH antibody - 20k hGH coupling product in which 20k hGH is specifically coupled to the abtibody-coupled insoluble carrier.
  • the culture medium of the hybridoma according to the above process is added to the coupling product prepared in the above second step to react with the monoclonal antibody in the medium to provide a sandwich complex of anti-hGH antibody - 20k hGH - anti-20k hGH monoclonal antibody on the anti-hGH-antibody-coupled insoluble carrier.
  • the sandwich complex prepared in the above third step is reacted with an enzyme-labeled antibody to an antibody of an immunized animal (referred to as "an enzyme-labeled antibody"), to determine the amount of the anti-20k hGH monoclonal antibody in the sandwich complex.
  • an enzyme-labeled antibody an enzyme-labeled antibody to an antibody of an immunized animal
  • the antibody to the antibody of the immunized animal used in the immunoassay may be either monoclonal or polyclonal, particularly a polyclonal antibody purified by affinity chromatography.
  • the labeling enzyme includes horse radish peroxidase, alkaline phosphatase, glucose oxidase and ⁇ -galactosidase.
  • the antibody to the antibody of the immunized animal may be labeled with any of these enzymes by a well-known procedure such as oxidizing a sugar chain of an enzyme with periodic acid to form an aldehyde group to which, for example, an amino acid of an anti-hGH antibody is then coupled; introducing an appropriate group such as maleimide group and pyridylsulfide group into the enzyme and coupling the introduced group to a thiol group in Fab' fragment of the anti-hGH antibody.
  • a well-known procedure such as oxidizing a sugar chain of an enzyme with periodic acid to form an aldehyde group to which, for example, an amino acid of an anti-hGH antibody is then coupled; introducing an appropriate group such as maleimide group and pyridylsulfide group into the enzyme and coupling the introduced group to a thiol group in Fab' fragment of the anti-hGH antibody.
  • the sandwich complex prepared in the fourth step to which the enzyme labeled antibody is coupled is quantified for its enzyme activity.
  • the enzyme activity depends on the amount of the monoclonal antibody in the culture medium of the hybridoma reactive to 20k hGH.
  • the activity may be determined by adding a substance as a substrate for the enzyme.
  • the screening in the above immunoassay may be, of course, the following procedure; coupling the antibody to the antibody of the immunized animal to the insoluble carrier to form an insoluble carrier coupled to the antibody to the antibody of the immunized animal, reacting the coupling product with the monoclonal antibody in the medium of the hybridoma and then with an appropriate amount of 20k hGH, and detecting 20k hGH having reacted with the monoclonal antibody in the medium of the hybridoma using an immunoassay to select hybridoma cells producing an antibody strongly reactive to 20k hGH, which may be within this invention because of having an effect comparable to the screening procedure using the above immunoassay.
  • the desired monoclonal antibody of this invention may be prepared with the hybridoma cells thus obtained, by culturing the hybridoma cells via a usual cell culture or an ascites formation technique, and purifying the monoclonal antibody from the resulting culture supernatant or ascites.
  • the monoclonal antibody from the culture supernatant or the ascites may be purified as usual; for example, ammonium sulfate fractionation, gel filtration, ion-exchange chromatography, affinity chromatography or any combination thereof, as appropriate.
  • An immunoassay for 20k hGH of this invention using a monoclonal antibody utilizes the monoclonal antibody; for example, enzyme immunoassay, radioimmunoassay, fluorescence immunoassay and luminescence immunoassay, preferably enzyme immunoassay.
  • the enzyme immunoassay may be preferably so-called sandwich immunoassay wherein the monoclonal antibody is coupled to an insoluble carrier to form a monoclonal-antibody-coupled insoluble carrier, which is used in the assay.
  • the monoclonal antibody of this invention is coupled to an insoluble carrier to form a monoclonal-antibody-coupled insoluble carrier, which is then reacted with a test solution containing a human growth hormone to form a coupling product in which only 20k hGH is specifically coupled with the monoclonal-antibody-coupled insoluble carrier.
  • the insoluble carrier may include a microplate, plastic beads, glass beads and magnetic fine particles.
  • the monoclonal antibody may be coupled to these insoluble carriers by a known chemical coupling process, but may be adequately coupled by a physical adsorption.
  • the monoclonal antibody of this invention is dissolved in buffer such as carbonate buffer and phosphate buffer, the above insoluble carrier is added, the mixture is left at 0°C to room temperature for at least one hour, and then the mixture is washed with buffer such as Tris-HCl buffer and phosphate buffer containing Tween 20 (polyoxyethylene-sorbital-monolaurate) and sodium azide, to remove uncoupled antibody.
  • buffer such as Tris-HCl buffer and phosphate buffer containing Tween 20 (polyoxyethylene-sorbital-monolaurate) and sodium azide
  • the coupling product prepared in the step (1) is reacted with an enzyme-labeled anti-hGH antibody (referred to as "an anti-hGH enzyme-labeled antibody”), to form a sandwich complex of anti-20k hGH monoclonal antibody of this invention - 20k hGH - anti-hGH enzyme-labeled antibody on the monoclonal antibody-coupled insoluble carrier.
  • an enzyme-labeled anti-hGH antibody referred to as "an anti-hGH enzyme-labeled antibody”
  • the anti-hGH antibody used in the anti-hGH enzyme-labeled antibody may be either an antibody which is reactive only to 20k hGH and recognizes an epitope which is not recognized by the above 20k hGH monoclonal antibody, or an antibody reactive to both 20k hGH and 22k hGH, as well as may be either monoclonal or polyclonal.
  • a preferred anti-hGH antibody may be an anti-hGH rabbit polyclonal antibody purified by affinity chromatography; specifically F(ab')2 fragment and Fab' fragment is desirable.
  • the labeling enzyme includes horse radish peroxidase, alkaline phosphatase, glucose oxidase and ⁇ -galactosidase.
  • the anti-hGH antibody or F(ab')2 fragment or Fab' fragment of the antibody may be labeled with any of these enzymes by a well-known procedure such as oxidizing a sugar chain of an enzyme with periodic acid to form an aldehyde group to which an amino acid such as an anti-hGH antibody is then coupled; introducing an appropriate group such as maleimide group and pyridylsulfide group into the enzyme and coupling the introduced group to a thiol group in Fab' fragment of the anti-hGH antibody.
  • the sandwich complex prepared in the step (2) is quantified for its enzyme activity. Since the enzyme activity depends on the amount of 20k hGH which has been originally reacted, only 20k hGH in the test solution may be quantified. The activity of the enzyme may be determined by adding a substance as a substrate for the enzyme.
  • the activity may be also determined by using an anti-hGH biotin-labeled antibody instead of the anti-hGH enzyme-labeled antibody to form the sandwich complex of anti-20k hGH monoclonal antibody of this invention - 20k hGH - anti-hGH biotin-labeled antibody on the monoclonal-antibody-coupled insoluble carrier, reacting the complex with an enzyme-labeled avidin or an enzyme-labeled streptoavidin to form a sandwich complex of anti-20k hGH monoclonal antibody of this invention - 20k hGH - anti-hGH biotin-labeled antibody - enzyme-labeled avidin or enzyme-labeled streptoavidin, and then determining the enzyme activity in the sandwich complex.
  • an anti-hGH biotin-labeled antibody instead of the anti-hGH enzyme-labeled antibody to form the sandwich complex of anti-20k hGH monoclonal antibody of this invention - 20k hGH - anti-hGH biot
  • the activity may be, of course, determined, replacing the order of the anti-20k hGH monoclonal antibody of this invention and the anti-hGH enzyme-labeled antibody. Since such a procedure has an effect comparable to the above sandwich immunoassay, it may be within this invention.
  • Samples as a control for determination in the immunoassay of this invention may include human blood, human urine and these which have been subject to treatment such as dilution, purification and pH adjustment.
  • Standard 20k hGH used for developing a calibration curve for the immunoassay of this invention may be 20k hGH prepared by a gene recombination technique.
  • the above immunoassay of this invention can specifically determine 20k hGH.
  • the immunoassay of this invention is extremely sensitive with the maximum measurement sensitivity of 0.001 ng/mL.
  • the immunoassay of this invention can directly and accurately quantify only 20k hGH around the range of its human baseline blood level.
  • Example 1 Preparation of an anti-20k hGH monoclonal antibody
  • a Balb/c mouse (5 weeks old, female) was immunized five times in total with purified 20k hGH prepared by gene recombination (JP-A 6-269292) as an antigen.
  • 20k hGH prepared by gene recombination
  • JP-A 6-269292 gene recombination
  • 100 ⁇ g of 20k hGH mixed with complete Freund's adjuvant (Difco) was intraperitoneally administered.
  • 50 ⁇ g of 20k hGH mixed with incomlete Freund's adjuvant (Difco) was administered three times, at intervals of two weeks.
  • the spleen cells of the immunized were mixed with murine myeloma cells P3X63Ag8 in the proportion of about 5:1 to 10:1, and then the cells were fused as usual, using 50 % (w/v) polyethylene glycol solution (GIBCO, average molecular weight: 4000) as a fusion accelerator.
  • GEBCO polyethylene glycol solution
  • the fused cells were suspended in a culture medium consisting of IMDM medium containing 20 % fetal bovine serum (GIBCO) with hypoxanthine, aminopterin and thymidine (HAT medium), in a level of 1 x 10 6 cells/mL as spleen cells. Aliquots (0.1 mL) of the suspension were poured to a 96-well microplate (Corning). The fused cells were cultured in a CO 2 -incubator (37°C, 5 % CO 2 ), while a half of the medium was replaced at intervals of 3 - 5 days. Hybridoma cells which could multiple in the HAT medium were selectively cultured.
  • IMDM medium consisting of IMDM medium containing 20 % fetal bovine serum (GIBCO) with hypoxanthine, aminopterin and thymidine (HAT medium)
  • HAT medium hypoxanthine, aminopterin and thymidine
  • the wells in which colonization was observed were screened by an immunoassay to determine whether they contained an antibody to 20k hGH in their supernatant.
  • an immunoassay to determine whether they contained an antibody to 20k hGH in their supernatant.
  • To a 96-well microplate (Greiner) were poured aliquots (50 ⁇ L) of an anti-hGH rabbit polyclonal antibody (10 ⁇ g/mL) in 0.1 M carbonate buffer, and then left overnight at 4°C to be fixed. This plate was washed with washings (10 mM Tris-HCl buffer (pH: 8.0) containing 0.02 % sodium azide and 0.05 % Tween 20), to which were then added aliquots (100 ⁇ L) of blocking solution 1 (PBS containing 0.5 % bovine serum albumin) for blocking.
  • PBS containing 0.5 % bovine serum albumin
  • hybridoma cells producing an antibody which reacts stronger with 20k hGH than with 22k hGH were cloned three times by a limiting dilution, to provide a hybridoma MTC6A strain, producing an antibody which is specifically reactive to 20k hGH, but substantially unreactive to 22k hGH.
  • MTC6A strain has been deposited, on May 30, 1996, with a deposit number FERM BP-5913 to the National Institute of Bioscience and Human-Technology of the Agency of Industrial Science and Technology of the Ministry of International Trade and Industry, 1-1-1, Higashi, Tsukuba, Ibaragi, Japan, under the Budapest Treaty for Deposit of Microorganisms.
  • the subclass of the anti-20k hGH monoclonal antibody produced by the obtained hybridoma MTC6A strain was determined with a test paper for isotyping a murine monoclonal antibody (ISO Strip; Berlinger Mannheim).
  • the subclass of the anti-20k hGH monoclonal antibody produced by MTC6A strain was IgG1 for a heavy chain and ⁇ for a light chain.
  • MTC6A strain was cultured and multiplied, and 1 x 10 7 cells were intraperitoneally inoculated into a Balb/c mouse having treated with Pristan before 2 weeks. After 10 to 14 days, ascites was taken from the abdomen of the mouse. The collected ascites was purified by affinity chromatography using Protein A (BIO RAD) to provide a MTC6A monoclonal antibody, the 20k hGH monoclonal antibody of this invention.
  • BIO RAD Protein A
  • the rabbit antiserum obtained from rabbit immunized in the above (1) was subject to sodium sulfate fractionation (18 % saturation), and was allowed to pass through DEAE-cellulose (DE-52; Whattman) equilibrated with 17.5 mM phosphate buffer (pH6.3). A non-adsorption fraction was collected to obtain an anti-hGH rabbit polyclonal antibody IgG fraction.
  • the anti-hGH rabbit polyclonal antibody IgG fraction obtained in the above (2) was dialyzed with 0.1 M citrate buffer (pH 4.5) containing 0.1 M sodium chloride, pH was adjusted to 3.7 with 1N hydrochloric acid, 3 % pepsin was added to the anti-hGH rabbit polyclonal antibody IgG fraction, and it was digested at 37°C for 3.5 hours. The reaction was quenched by adjusting pH to 7.5 to 8.0 with 1M Tris solution.
  • the mixture was gel-filtrated with S-200SF column (Pharmacia) equilibrated with 0.05 M phosphate buffer (pH 6.5) containing 2 mM disodium ethylenediamine tetraacetate and 0.1 M sodium chloride, and a fraction corresponding to an initially-eluted peak was collected.
  • the mixture was gel-filtrated with Sephadex G-25 column (Pharmacia) equilibrated with 0.05 M phosphate buffer (pH 6.5) containing 2 mM disodium ethylenediamine tetraacetate and 0.1 M sodium chloride, and a fraction corresponding to an initially-eluted peak was collected (pyridyldithio group-coupled POD fraction).
  • the MTC6A monoclonal antibody obtained according to Example 1 was evaluated by an immunoassay for its antigen specificity.
  • the antigens used were purified 20k hGH produced by gene recombination (JP-A 6-269292), and its analogous peptide hormones, human prolactin (referred to as "hPRL”; UCB BIOPRODUCTS) and human cilium somatomamotropin (referred to as "hCS”; CHEMICON).
  • hPRL human prolactin
  • hCS human cilium somatomamotropin
  • CHEMICON human cilium somatomamotropin
  • Example 3 Reactivity of the MTC6A monoclonal antibody to 20k hGH and 22k hGH in a sandwich immunoassay
  • the MTC6A monoclonal antibody obtained according to Example 1 was evaluated for its reactivity to 20k hGH and 22k hGH.
  • the MTC6A monoclonal antibody was diluted with PBS to 10 ⁇ g/mL, aliquots (50 ⁇ L) of the solution were poured to a 96-well microplate (Greiner), and the microplate was left at 4°C overnight. This plate was washed with washings (10 mM Tris-HCl buffer (pH: 8.0) containing 0.05 % Tween 20), and treated with blocking solution 2 (4-fold dilution of Block Ace (Yukijirushi) in PBS) for blocking.
  • Example 4 Determination of 20k hGH in human blood with the MTC6A monoclonal antibody
  • MTC6A monoclonal antibody 20k hGH in human blood was determined with the MTC6A monoclonal antibody.
  • the MTC6A monoclonal antibody was diluted with PBS to 10 ⁇ g/mL, aliquots (50 ⁇ L) of the dilution were poured to a 96-well microplate (Greiner), and the plate was left at 4°C overnight. After washing this plate with washings (10mM Tris-HCl buffer (pH 8.0) containing 0.05 % Tween 20), it was blocked with blocking solution 2 (4-fold dilution of Block Ace (Yukijirushi) with PBS).
  • a substrate solution 0.1 % citrate-phosphate buffer (pH 5.0) containing 0.67 mg/mL of 1,2-phenylenediamine(DAKO)
  • a substrate solution 0.1 % citrate-phosphate buffer (pH 5.0) containing 0.67 mg/mL of 1,2-phenylenediamine(DAKO)
  • aliquots (100 ⁇ L) of 1N sulfuric acid were added to quench the reaction, and absorbance at 490 nm was determined with Immunoreader (Nippon Intermed), to determine the level of 20k hGH by comparing with a calibration curve.
  • the calibration curve had been developed by conducting determination as described above, using standard 20k hGH diluted with blocking solution 2 instead of the above test solution.
  • Table 2 shows the values of the calibration curve and coefficients of variation in determination
  • Table 3 shows the measured values for the test solution and the recoveries of 20k hGH added.
  • Table 2 Calibration curve for 20k hGH 20k hGH(pg/mL) 0 10 100 500 1000 Average of measured values (A 490 ) 0.048 0.080 0.379 1.804 3.100 Coefficient of variance (%) 7.4 6.5 4.9 4.1 11.1
  • Table 3 Recovery of 20k hGH added Amount of 20k hGH added 0 pg/mL 50 pg/mL 100 pg/mL Serum 1 A 490 0.494 0.663 0.804 Calculated value 129 pg/mL 177 pg/mL 217 pg/mL Recovery 100 % 96 % 88 % Serum 2 A 490 1.522 1.681 1.856 Calculated value 421 pg/mL 466 pg/mL 516 pg/mL Recovery 100

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Abstract

A monoclonal antibody specifically reactive to a human growth hormone with a molecular weight of about 20,000, a cell line capable of producing the monoclonal antibody and an immunoassay of a human growth hormone having a molecular weight of about 20,000 using the monoclonal antibody.
An animal cell capable of producing an antibody specific to a human growth hormone having a molecular weight of 20,000 (20k hGH) was prepared from an animal immunized with 20k hGH. The animal cell was fused with a myeloma cell to produce a monoclonal antibody which specifically reacted to 20k hGH, but substantially not to 22k hGH. The monoclonal antibody was useful for immunoassay of 20k hGH.

Description

  • A monoclonal antibody specifically reactive to a human growth hormone with a molecular weight of about 20,000, a cell line capable of producing the monoclonal antibody and an immunoassay of a human growth hormone having a molecular weight of about 20,000 using the monoclonal antibody.
  • This invention relates to a monoclonal antibody utilized in an assay of a human growth hormone with a molecular weight of about 20,000; a cell line capable of producing the monoclonal antibody; and a sensitive immunoassay of a human growth hormone with a molecular weight of about 20,000 by means of the monoclonal antibody.
  • It is known that in a human body, there are two main human growth hormones (sometimes referred to as "hGH"); peptide hormones with a molecular weight of about 22,000 (referred to as "22k hGH") and about 20,000 (referred to as "20k hGH"). 22khGH is a protein with 191 amino acids, while 20k hGH is a protein with 176 amino acids.
  • Both 20k hGH and 22k hGH are proteins originally encoded in a single gene, and are, therefore, very similar in their amino acid sequences, except for a difference that 20k hGH has a structure with a deletion of 15 amino acids of 32nd to 46th from the N-terminus of 22k hGH.
  • It is known that in an adult with normal secretion, a hGH level is below about 5 ng/mL as a baseline level in the morning.
  • The previous studies have shown that in a human body 22k hGH exists much more than 20k hGH; specifically 20k hGH could account for 5 to 20 % of the total hGHs.
  • The blood level of the hGHs varies constantly and largely, i.e., significantly varies within a day and increases during exercise or sleeping. However, the above findings for the quantitative ratio between 20k hGH and 22k hGH have been obtained by measuring hGHs extracted from a human pituitary. Therefore, the quantitative ratio between them in their natural secretion dynamics in a human body is still unknown and whether it varies in a short time is also unknown.
  • As a drug, 22k hGH has been marketed, and has been studied more intensively than 20k hGH.
  • The biological activities of 20k hGH have been recently reported; its growth-promoting activity is comparable to that of 22k hGH, is less inducible in an abnormal glucose tolerance and could be less diabetogenous (Lewis, U.J., et al., Endocriniol. Japon, 34, 73-85(1987)). This suggests that when a human growth hormone is used as a drug 20k hGH could have less risk of adverse drug reactions than 22k hGH. Thus, usefulness of 20k hGH has been increasingly paid much attention as a drug for a substitution therapy to an adult with growth hormone deficiency (Hisao Seno, Igaku No Ayumi, 165, 247-251(1993)).
  • However, there had been no successful cases for producing a large amount of pure 20k hGH before the present inventors have first established a preparation process recently, and thus there has not been obtained 20k hGH with sufficient amount and purity to conduct a variety of studies.
    Therefore, 20k hGH has never been clinically applied. In addition, since there have been not developed a sensitive immunoassay for 20k hGH, it has been difficult for a long time to determine relationship between the activities and the molecular structures of 20 k hGH and 22k hGH. The previous studies for 20k hGH have been mainly in a molecular or cellular level using a small amount of 20k hGH extracted from a living body, and there have been no clinical studies for 20k hGH.
  • The determination methods of hGHs will be described. There are several known determination methods for hGHs in human blood or urine to explicate biological roles of hGHs (e.g., Hashida and Ishikawa et al., Clinica. Chimica. Acta, 162, 229-235(1987)).
  • It is essential for developing hGHs as a drug that an accurate secretion dyanamics is determined in a clinical trial, including a baseline blood level of hGHs in a human body. In addition, the determination method is required to be sensitive with no errors.
  • Since 22k hGH has been clinically applied, there are immunoassays capable of determining a baseline blood level in the morning for 22k hGH (below 5 ng/mL).
  • For example, for 22k hGH, an immunoassy using an antibody specific to 22k hGH has been disclosed in Japanese Patent Laid-Open No. 273496/88 (JP-A 63-273496). The specification describes that its cross-reactivity to 20k hGH is 15 % However, since the purity level of the standard 20k hGH used in the method is not described, the above percentage may be quite questionable.
  • On the other hand, all of the previous examples for immunoassays for 20k hGH were to measure around a higher value (1 ng/mL) of 20k hGH secretion under exercise load. Any of the previous determination methods has a performance only for investigating human 20k hGH in cellular level due to its inadequate cross-reactivity and sensitivity, i.e., does not have an adequate sensitivity to determine its baseline blood level.
  • The known immunoassays for 20k hGH are as follows.
  • There is an assay wherein a value for 20k hGH is obtained by subtracting a measured value for an antibody specifically reacting with 22k hGH from a measured value for an antibody reacting with all hGHs (Eur. J.Appl.Physiol., 62, 130-134(1991)). The author has assumed that hGHs other than 22k hGH would consist of 20k hGH. Recently, several variants of hGH have been discovered, which will react with an antibody as total hGHs like 20k hGH. Therefore, the author would probably have determined the variants as 20k hGH, and thus the measured values for 20k hGH must be quite inaccurate.
  • A monoclonal antibody specific to 20k hGH has been disclosed by Mario Mellado, et al. (Journal of Clinica Endocrinology and Metabolism, 81, 1613-1618(1996)), who describes that cross-reactivity to 22k hGH is below 1 %, and does not demonstrate an actual example of determination of 20k hGH in human body fluid. As discussed later, it is impossible in theory to elucidate the secretion dynamics in a human body of 20k hGH using the monoclonal antibody of this article.
  • Hence, there have been no sensitive immunoassays capable of evaluating the secretion dynamics of 20k hGH. Determining the secretion dynamics of 20k hGH means that 20k hGH can be accurately determined in a relatively low level near its baseline blood level. For an immunoassay of 22k hGH, the situation is similar in terms of accurate determination in relatively lower level around its baseline blood level. For 20k hGH, there are, however, intrinsic problems in cross-reactivity and sensitivity, but not for 22k hGH. Thus, it has been difficult to provide a sensitive immunoassay for 20k hGH in contrast to the immunoassays for 22k hGH.
  • Cross-reactivity is a phenomenon observed when an epitope reactive to an antibody is also reactive to another antibody. The cross-reactivity should be taken into consideration in an immunoassay for 22k hGH. However, it will not be a significant problem because of the following reasons: First, 22k hGH is contained in blood much more than 20k hGH (5 to 20 times). Next, as described above, 22k hGH has a unique sequence consisting of 15 amino acids. Therefore, if a monoclonal antibody capable of recognizing the unique sequence as an epitope could be prepared, a monoclonal antibody which may specifically react with 22k hGH and be adequately sensitive would be readily prepared.
  • On the other hand, for an immunoassay for 20k hGH, it is difficult to solve the problems of cross-reactivity and sensitivity due to the following reasons.
  • First, 20k hGH is much less than 22k hGH in blood (1/5 to 1/20). This simply means that a sensitive immunoassay for 20k hGH is required to has a sensitivity 10 times higher than a sensitive immunoassay for 22k hGH. Furthermore, cross-reactivity to 22k hGH significantly affects the precision in the measurement.
  • Next, 20k hGH is different from 22k hGH in that it does not have a unique amino acid sequence. If anything, the ligation segment between the termini of the deletion of the 15 amino acids from 22k hGH, i.e., the sequence wherein 31st phenylalanine and 32nd asparagine (47th amino acid from N-terminus in 22k hGH) from N-terminus are adjacent to each other, might be considered to be a unique amino acid sequence in 20k hGH. Lewis et al have immunized an animal with a polypeptide coupled with albumin containing a region in the vicinity of the amino acid sequence (an amino acid sequence of 28th to 38th from N-terminus of 20k hGH) and attempted to prepare a monoclonal antibody recognizing the polypeptide as an epitope, but have been unsuccessful (Lewis U.J. et al, Endocrinol Japon, Vol.34, pp.73-85(1987)).
  • Thirdly, to prepare a monoclonal antibody which is little cross-reactive to 22k hGH, but is adequately sensitive, it is necessary to separate a number of cells producing a monoclonal antibody, from which the cells producing the desired monoclonal antibody are then selected. Furthermore, in this case, the animals for preparing the antibody-producing cells should be adequately immunized, requiring a large amount of pure 20k hGH.
  • To date 20k hGH has not been commercially available and there are few methods for its preparation. In such a situation, it is difficult to obtain 20k hGH in an amount to adequately immunize an animal. Before this invention, it has been difficult to adequately immunize an animal with 20k hGH for preparing antibody-producing cells. Consequently, it has been quite difficult to obtain cells producing the desired monoclonal antibody.
  • Thus, in contrast to a monoclonal antibody specific to 22k hGH, it has been hard to obtain a monoclonal antibody specific to 20k hGH, and therefore, it has been difficult to establish a sensitive immunoassay for 20k hGH using the monoclonal antibody.
  • The followings will describe the problems of cross-reactivity and sensitivity in a sensitive immunoassay for 20k hGH in terms of the above process described by Mellado et al.
  • Mellado et al. describe that the monoclonal antibody reactive to 20k hGH has below 1 % of cross-reactivity to 22k hGH. If a sample containing 5 ng/mL of 22k hGH and 250 pg/mL of 20k hGH is subject to an immunoassay using a monoclonal antibody with 1 % of cross-reactivity, a measured value will be 5000 pg/mL × 0.01 + 250 pg/mL = 300 pg/mL, giving an error of 20 % compared with the true value, which indicates that determination of a baseline blood level is not feasible.
  • In addition, Mellado et al. describe that the measuring sensitivity of the immunoassay is 4 ng/mL. Since a peak level of 20k hGH in human blood is about 1 ng/mL for a normal adult, the immunoassay described by Mellado et al. can never determine the baseline blood level of 20k hGH. In other words, this method can never elucidate the secretion dynamics of 20k hGH in human blood.
  • As described above, Mellado et al. have not solved the above problems of cross-reactivity and sensitivity in an immunoassay for 20k hGH. That is, the monoclonal antibody described by Mellado et al. and the immunoassay therewith cannot be applied to a clinical study for development of 20k hGH as a drug.
  • To solve the problems, this invention provides a sensitive immunoassay for 20k hGH which is useful in development of 20k hGH as a drug, can determine the baseline blood level of 20k hGH, and can allow us to elucidate the secretion dynamics of 20k hGH.
  • Thus, the present invention seeks to provide a monoclonal antibody which is specifically reactive to 20k hGH, but substantially unreactive to 22k hGH and its preparation process; a cell line capable of producing the antibody; and an immunoassay for 20k hGH using the antibody which can accurately and directly quantify 20k hGH in human blood.
  • The inventors have attempted to prepare the desired monoclonal antibody, improving the followings to solve the above problems.
  • First, a large amount of pure 20k hGH was prepared, and it was repeatedly administered to an animal for adequate immunization. Next, as a screening procedure we used a sandwich immunoassay in a liquid system instead of a previous immunoassay in a solid system. Because of these improvements, we have been successful in preparing a monoclonal antibody which is specifically reactive to 20k hGH, but substantially unreactive to 22k hGH. Furthermore, we have established a sensitive immunoassay which can specifically determine 20k hGH in a level around its baseline blood level using the monoclonal antibody, to achieve this invention.
  • This invention provides a monoclonal antibody which is specifically reactive to 20k hGH, but substantially unreactive to 22k hGH; a cell line producing the monoclonal antibody; and an immunoassay for 20k hGH using the monoclonal antibody.
  • This invention provides a cell line producing a monoclonal antibody which is specifically reactive to 20k hGH, but substantially unreactive to 22k hGH. This invention also provides a monoclonal antibody which is specifically reactive to 20k hGH, but substantially unreactive to 22k hGH, and a process for preparation of the monoclonal antibody. Furthermore, this invention provides an immunoassay using the monoclonal antibody of this invention.
  • The monoclonal antibody of this invention has a markedly lower cross-reactivity to 22k hGH and a high affinity to 20k hGH than those of the prior art. The immunoassay using the monoclonal antibody of this invention may be, therefore, an effective means for elucidating the secretion dynamics of 20k hGH, by permitting determination of the baseline blood level of 20k hGH which has not been feasible. Since 20k hGH would be useful as a drug such as a remedy for growth impairment, the immunoassay of this invention is useful for developing 20k hGH as a medicament.
  • Figure 1 shows reactivity of 20k hGH and 22k hGH to the MTC6A monoclonal antibody in a sandwich immunoassay.
  • The hormone 20k hGH with which the monocloal antibody of this invention reacts, is a protein comprising 176 amino acids, including those derived from human pituitary and human blood; and those which are produced by a gene recombination technique. There are two types of known 20k hGH in which the 14th amino acid from N-terminus is serine or methionine, and both of which may be used in this invention.
  • The hormone 22k hGH with which the monoclonal antibody of this invention does not react, is a protein comprising 191 amino acids, including those derived from human pituitary and human blood; and those produced by a gene recombination technique.
  • The monoclonal antibody of this invention is one which is specifically reactive to 20k hGH, but substantially unreactive to 22k hGH.
  • For the purpose of this invention, a monoclonal antibody which is specifically reactive to 20k hGH, but substantially unreactive to 22k hGH is one which has an extremely low cross-reactivity to 22k hGH and causes a negligible error due to its reactivity to 22k hGH, in determining 20k hGH, e.g., one whose cross-reactivity is below 0.1 %, preferably below 0.03 %, in a sandwich immunoassay illustrated later.
  • The globulin type of the monoclonal antibody of this invention is not restricted as long as it is specifically reactive to 20k hGH, but substantially unreactive to 22k hGH i.e. less than 1% reactive, preferably less than 0.1 reactive; for example, IgG, IgM, IgA, IgE and IgD.
  • The monoclonal antibody of this invention may be prepared from a cell line producing the antibody.
  • The cell line producing the monoclonal antibody of this invention is not restricted as long as it can produce a monoclonal antibody which is specifically reactive to 20k hGH, but substantially unreactive to 22k hGH, and, for example, may be obtained as a hybridoma via a cell fusion of a cell producing an anti-20k hGH antibody with a myeloma cell strain. Such a hybridoma includes MTC6A strain (FERM BP-5913).
  • Specifically, a hybridoma cell strain producing a monoclonal antibody which is specifically reactive to 20k hGH, but substantially unreactive to 22k hGH, may be prepared by the following cell fusion technique.
  • Antibody-producing cells which may be used in a process for preparing the cell strain of this invention, includes spleen cells, lymphatic node cells and B-lymphocytes. Antigens which may be used include 20k hGH extracted from a pituitary or produced by a gene recombination technique. An immunized animal may be a mammal such as a mouse and a rat. An antigen may be administered to the animal as usual. For example, a suspension or emulsion is prepared with an adjuvant such as complete Freund's adjuvant and incomplete Freund's adjuvant and 20k hGH as an antigen, and is administered several times to an animal, for example, intravenously, subcutaneously, intracutaneously or intraperitoneally, for immunization. From the immunized animal, antibody-producing cells such as spleen cells are removed, which are then fused with myeloma cells according to a known procedure (G.Kohler et al., Nature, 256, 495(1975)) to provide the hybridoma cells of this invention.
  • For a mouse, a myeloma cell strain which may be used in the cell fusion includes P3X63Ag8, P3U1 and Sp2/0 strains. A fusion accelerator such as polyethylene glycol and Sendai virus may be used in the cell fusion, and the hypoxanthine-aminopterin-thymidine (HAT) medium may be used as usual for selection of a hybridoma after the cell fusion.
  • The hybridoma prepared by the cell fusion is cloned by, for example, a limiting dilution, which is then screened by an immunoassay with 20k hGH and 22k hGH (e.g., Jenotropine™ (Sumitomo Pharm.)) to provide a cell line producing a monoclonal antibody which is specifically reactive to 20k hGH, but substantially unreactive to 22k hGH.
  • The cell strain of this invention is screened by (1) coupling an antibody specifically reactive to a human growth hormone (referred to as "anti-hGH antibody") to an insoluble carrier to form an hGH-antibody-coupled insoluble carrier, (2) reacting the hGH-antibody-coupled insoluble carrier with 20k hGH to form an anti-hGH antibody - 20k hGH coupling product, (3) reacting the coupling product to the monoclonal antibody in the medium of the above hybridoma to form a complex of anti-hGH antibody - 20k hGH - 20k hGH monoclonal antibody, (4) coupling the complex to an enzyme-labeled antibody to form a complex of anti-hGH antibody - 20k hGH - 20k hGH monoclonal antibody-enzyme-labeled antibody, and (5) determining the activity of the enzyme labeling the antibody using the above complex with the enzyme-labeled antibody to select hybridoma cells.
  • A screening by an immunoassay will be described in detail.
  • In the first step, an anti-hGH antibody is coupled to an insoluble carrier to form an anti-hGH-antibody-coupled insoluble carrier. The insoluble carrier may include a microplate, plastic beads, glass beads and magnetic fine particles. The anti-hGH antibody is one reactive to both 20k hGH and 22k hGH, and may be either monoclonal or polyclonal. It may be preferably an anti-hGH rabbit polyclonal antibody purified by affinity chromatography, specifically F(ab')2 fragment or Fab' fragment to reduce non-specific adsorption. The antibody may be coupled to these insoluble carriers by a known chemical coupling process, but may be adequately coupled by a physical adsorption. Specifically, the anti-hGH antibody is dissolved in carbonate or phosphate buffer, the above insoluble carrier is added to the solution, the mixture is left at 0 °C to room temperature for at least one hour, and then the mixture is washed with buffer such as Tris-HCl buffer or phosphate buffer containing Tween 20 (polyoxyethylene-sorbital-monolaurate) and sodium azide, to remove uncoupled antibody.
  • In the second step, the anti-hGH-antibody-coupled insluble carrier prepared in the first step is reacted with an appropriate amount of 20k hGH, to form an anti-hGH antibody - 20k hGH coupling product in which 20k hGH is specifically coupled to the abtibody-coupled insoluble carrier.
  • In the third step, the culture medium of the hybridoma according to the above process is added to the coupling product prepared in the above second step to react with the monoclonal antibody in the medium to provide a sandwich complex of anti-hGH antibody - 20k hGH - anti-20k hGH monoclonal antibody on the anti-hGH-antibody-coupled insoluble carrier.
  • In the fourth step, the sandwich complex prepared in the above third step is reacted with an enzyme-labeled antibody to an antibody of an immunized animal (referred to as "an enzyme-labeled antibody"), to determine the amount of the anti-20k hGH monoclonal antibody in the sandwich complex. The antibody to the antibody of the immunized animal used in the immunoassay may be either monoclonal or polyclonal, particularly a polyclonal antibody purified by affinity chromatography. The labeling enzyme includes horse radish peroxidase, alkaline phosphatase, glucose oxidase and β-galactosidase. The antibody to the antibody of the immunized animal may be labeled with any of these enzymes by a well-known procedure such as oxidizing a sugar chain of an enzyme with periodic acid to form an aldehyde group to which, for example, an amino acid of an anti-hGH antibody is then coupled; introducing an appropriate group such as maleimide group and pyridylsulfide group into the enzyme and coupling the introduced group to a thiol group in Fab' fragment of the anti-hGH antibody.
  • In the fifth step, the sandwich complex prepared in the fourth step to which the enzyme labeled antibody is coupled, is quantified for its enzyme activity.
  • The enzyme activity depends on the amount of the monoclonal antibody in the culture medium of the hybridoma reactive to 20k hGH. The activity may be determined by adding a substance as a substrate for the enzyme.
  • The screening in the above immunoassay may be, of course, the following procedure; coupling the antibody to the antibody of the immunized animal to the insoluble carrier to form an insoluble carrier coupled to the antibody to the antibody of the immunized animal, reacting the coupling product with the monoclonal antibody in the medium of the hybridoma and then with an appropriate amount of 20k hGH, and detecting 20k hGH having reacted with the monoclonal antibody in the medium of the hybridoma using an immunoassay to select hybridoma cells producing an antibody strongly reactive to 20k hGH, which may be within this invention because of having an effect comparable to the screening procedure using the above immunoassay.
  • The desired monoclonal antibody of this invention may be prepared with the hybridoma cells thus obtained, by culturing the hybridoma cells via a usual cell culture or an ascites formation technique, and purifying the monoclonal antibody from the resulting culture supernatant or ascites.
  • The monoclonal antibody from the culture supernatant or the ascites may be purified as usual; for example, ammonium sulfate fractionation, gel filtration, ion-exchange chromatography, affinity chromatography or any combination thereof, as appropriate.
  • An immunoassay for 20k hGH of this invention using a monoclonal antibody utilizes the monoclonal antibody; for example, enzyme immunoassay, radioimmunoassay, fluorescence immunoassay and luminescence immunoassay, preferably enzyme immunoassay. The enzyme immunoassay may be preferably so-called sandwich immunoassay wherein the monoclonal antibody is coupled to an insoluble carrier to form a monoclonal-antibody-coupled insoluble carrier, which is used in the assay.
  • The determination process of this invention will be illustrated, based on sandwich immunoassay.
  • In the step (1), the monoclonal antibody of this invention is coupled to an insoluble carrier to form a monoclonal-antibody-coupled insoluble carrier, which is then reacted with a test solution containing a human growth hormone to form a coupling product in which only 20k hGH is specifically coupled with the monoclonal-antibody-coupled insoluble carrier. The insoluble carrier may include a microplate, plastic beads, glass beads and magnetic fine particles. The monoclonal antibody may be coupled to these insoluble carriers by a known chemical coupling process, but may be adequately coupled by a physical adsorption. Specifically, the monoclonal antibody of this invention is dissolved in buffer such as carbonate buffer and phosphate buffer, the above insoluble carrier is added, the mixture is left at 0°C to room temperature for at least one hour, and then the mixture is washed with buffer such as Tris-HCl buffer and phosphate buffer containing Tween 20 (polyoxyethylene-sorbital-monolaurate) and sodium azide, to remove uncoupled antibody. Next, the resulting monoclonal-antibody-coupled insoluble carrier is reacted with a test solution containing a human growth hormone to be coupled to the 20k hGH in the test solution.
  • In the step (2), the coupling product prepared in the step (1) is reacted with an enzyme-labeled anti-hGH antibody (referred to as "an anti-hGH enzyme-labeled antibody"), to form a sandwich complex of anti-20k hGH monoclonal antibody of this invention - 20k hGH - anti-hGH enzyme-labeled antibody on the monoclonal antibody-coupled insoluble carrier.
  • The anti-hGH antibody used in the anti-hGH enzyme-labeled antibody may be either an antibody which is reactive only to 20k hGH and recognizes an epitope which is not recognized by the above 20k hGH monoclonal antibody, or an antibody reactive to both 20k hGH and 22k hGH, as well as may be either monoclonal or polyclonal. In particular, a preferred anti-hGH antibody may be an anti-hGH rabbit polyclonal antibody purified by affinity chromatography; specifically F(ab')2 fragment and Fab' fragment is desirable.
  • The labeling enzyme includes horse radish peroxidase, alkaline phosphatase, glucose oxidase and β-galactosidase.
  • The anti-hGH antibody or F(ab')2 fragment or Fab' fragment of the antibody may be labeled with any of these enzymes by a well-known procedure such as oxidizing a sugar chain of an enzyme with periodic acid to form an aldehyde group to which an amino acid such as an anti-hGH antibody is then coupled; introducing an appropriate group such as maleimide group and pyridylsulfide group into the enzyme and coupling the introduced group to a thiol group in Fab' fragment of the anti-hGH antibody.
  • In the step (3), the sandwich complex prepared in the step (2) is quantified for its enzyme activity. Since the enzyme activity depends on the amount of 20k hGH which has been originally reacted, only 20k hGH in the test solution may be quantified. The activity of the enzyme may be determined by adding a substance as a substrate for the enzyme. The activity may be also determined by using an anti-hGH biotin-labeled antibody instead of the anti-hGH enzyme-labeled antibody to form the sandwich complex of anti-20k hGH monoclonal antibody of this invention - 20k hGH - anti-hGH biotin-labeled antibody on the monoclonal-antibody-coupled insoluble carrier, reacting the complex with an enzyme-labeled avidin or an enzyme-labeled streptoavidin to form a sandwich complex of anti-20k hGH monoclonal antibody of this invention - 20k hGH - anti-hGH biotin-labeled antibody - enzyme-labeled avidin or enzyme-labeled streptoavidin, and then determining the enzyme activity in the sandwich complex.
  • In the above sandwich immunoassay, the activity may be, of course, determined, replacing the order of the anti-20k hGH monoclonal antibody of this invention and the anti-hGH enzyme-labeled antibody. Since such a procedure has an effect comparable to the above sandwich immunoassay, it may be within this invention.
  • Samples as a control for determination in the immunoassay of this invention may include human blood, human urine and these which have been subject to treatment such as dilution, purification and pH adjustment.
  • Standard 20k hGH used for developing a calibration curve for the immunoassay of this invention may be 20k hGH prepared by a gene recombination technique.
  • The above immunoassay of this invention can specifically determine 20k hGH. The immunoassay of this invention is extremely sensitive with the maximum measurement sensitivity of 0.001 ng/mL. Thus, the immunoassay of this invention can directly and accurately quantify only 20k hGH around the range of its human baseline blood level.
  • Examples
  • This invention will be specifically illustrated, but not limited to, by the following examples.
  • Example 1: Preparation of an anti-20k hGH monoclonal antibody (1) Immunization
  • A Balb/c mouse (5 weeks old, female) was immunized five times in total with purified 20k hGH prepared by gene recombination (JP-A 6-269292) as an antigen. In the first immunization, 100 µg of 20k hGH mixed with complete Freund's adjuvant (Difco) was intraperitoneally administered. Then, 50 µg of 20k hGH mixed with incomlete Freund's adjuvant (Difco) was administered three times, at intervals of two weeks. In the final immunization, two weeks after the 4th immunization a solution of 50 µg of 20k hGH in saline was injected in the caudal vein, and after additional three days spleen cells of the immunized mouse were used in cell fusion.
  • (2) Preparation of antibody-producing hybridoma cells by cell fusion
  • The spleen cells of the immunized were mixed with murine myeloma cells P3X63Ag8 in the proportion of about 5:1 to 10:1, and then the cells were fused as usual, using 50 % (w/v) polyethylene glycol solution (GIBCO, average molecular weight: 4000) as a fusion accelerator.
  • The fused cells were suspended in a culture medium consisting of IMDM medium containing 20 % fetal bovine serum (GIBCO) with hypoxanthine, aminopterin and thymidine (HAT medium), in a level of 1 x 106 cells/mL as spleen cells. Aliquots (0.1 mL) of the suspension were poured to a 96-well microplate (Corning). The fused cells were cultured in a CO2-incubator (37°C, 5 % CO2), while a half of the medium was replaced at intervals of 3 - 5 days. Hybridoma cells which could multiple in the HAT medium were selectively cultured.
  • (3) Screening
  • The wells in which colonization was observed were screened by an immunoassay to determine whether they contained an antibody to 20k hGH in their supernatant. To a 96-well microplate (Greiner) were poured aliquots (50 µL) of an anti-hGH rabbit polyclonal antibody (10 µg/mL) in 0.1 M carbonate buffer, and then left overnight at 4°C to be fixed. This plate was washed with washings (10 mM Tris-HCl buffer (pH: 8.0) containing 0.02 % sodium azide and 0.05 % Tween 20), to which were then added aliquots (100 µL) of blocking solution 1 (PBS containing 0.5 % bovine serum albumin) for blocking. After blocking solution 1 was removed, to 48 of 96 wells and the other 48 wells were added aliquots (50 µL) of 20k hGH (10 ng/mL) in blocking solution 1 and aliquots (50 µL) of 22k hGH (trade name: Genotropin; Sumitomo Pharm.)(10 ng/mL) in blocking solution 1, respectively, and then shaken at room temperature for 2 hours. After washing the plate with washings, aliquots (50 µL) of the supernatant of the wells in the above (2) in which colonization was observed, were added to the 20k hGH wells and the 22k hGH wells, and then shaked at room temperature for 2 hours. After washing, to the wells were added aliquots (100 µL) of an alkaline phosphatase-labeled anti-murine Igs antibody (DAKO) 500-fold diluted by blocking solution 1, and then shaken at room temperature for 2 hours. After washing with washings, to the wells were added aliquots (50 µL) of a substrate solution (9.6 % diethanolamine buffer (pH 9.6) containing 0.6 % p-nitrophenyl phosphate and 0.5 mM magnesium chloride), and then shaken at room temperature for 30 min. To the reaction solutions, aliquots (50 µL) of 3N sodium hydroxide were added to quench the reaction, and absorbance at 405 nm was determined with Immunoreader (Nippon Intermed) to select colonies reacting more strongly with 20k hGH than with 22k hGH, for cloning.
  • (4) Cloning of the hybridoma
  • The hybridoma cells producing an antibody which reacts stronger with 20k hGH than with 22k hGH, were cloned three times by a limiting dilution, to provide a hybridoma MTC6A strain, producing an antibody which is specifically reactive to 20k hGH, but substantially unreactive to 22k hGH. MTC6A strain has been deposited, on May 30, 1996, with a deposit number FERM BP-5913 to the National Institute of Bioscience and Human-Technology of the Agency of Industrial Science and Technology of the Ministry of International Trade and Industry, 1-1-1, Higashi, Tsukuba, Ibaragi, Japan, under the Budapest Treaty for Deposit of Microorganisms.
  • (5) Determination of the subclass of the monoclonal antibody produced by the hybridoma
  • The subclass of the anti-20k hGH monoclonal antibody produced by the obtained hybridoma MTC6A strain, was determined with a test paper for isotyping a murine monoclonal antibody (ISO Strip; Berlinger Mannheim). The subclass of the anti-20k hGH monoclonal antibody produced by MTC6A strain was IgG1 for a heavy chain and κ for a light chain.
  • (6) Preparation of a monoclonal antibody
  • MTC6A strain was cultured and multiplied, and 1 x 107 cells were intraperitoneally inoculated into a Balb/c mouse having treated with Pristan before 2 weeks. After 10 to 14 days, ascites was taken from the abdomen of the mouse. The collected ascites was purified by affinity chromatography using Protein A (BIO RAD) to provide a MTC6A monoclonal antibody, the 20k hGH monoclonal antibody of this invention.
  • Referential Example 1: Preparation of an anti-hGH rabbit polyclonal antibody and an anti-hGH labeled antibody (1) Immunization
  • First, 100 µg of purified 20k hGH prepared by gene recombination (JP-A 6-269292) was mixed with complete Freund's adjuvant (Difco) and the mixture was administered to a rabbit at several points of its back for immunization. Then, the animal was repeatedly immunized 5 times in total at intervals of 2 weeks, in a similar manner.
  • (2) Purification of the antiserum
  • The rabbit antiserum obtained from rabbit immunized in the above (1) was subject to sodium sulfate fractionation (18 % saturation), and was allowed to pass through DEAE-cellulose (DE-52; Whattman) equilibrated with 17.5 mM phosphate buffer (pH6.3). A non-adsorption fraction was collected to obtain an anti-hGH rabbit polyclonal antibody IgG fraction.
  • (3) Preparation of the anti-hGH labeled antibody
  • The anti-hGH rabbit polyclonal antibody IgG fraction obtained in the above (2) was dialyzed with 0.1 M citrate buffer (pH 4.5) containing 0.1 M sodium chloride, pH was adjusted to 3.7 with 1N hydrochloric acid, 3 % pepsin was added to the anti-hGH rabbit polyclonal antibody IgG fraction, and it was digested at 37°C for 3.5 hours. The reaction was quenched by adjusting pH to 7.5 to 8.0 with 1M Tris solution. The mixture was gel-filtrated with S-200SF column (Pharmacia) equilibrated with 0.05 M phosphate buffer (pH 6.5) containing 2 mM disodium ethylenediamine tetraacetate and 0.1 M sodium chloride, and a fraction corresponding to an initially-eluted peak was collected.
  • To the collected fraction was added 1/50 amount of 0.2 M 2-mercaptoethylamine solution, and the mixture was reacted at 37°C for 90 minutes. Then, the mixture was gel-filtrated with Sephadex G-25 column (Pharmacia) equilibrated with 0.05 M phosphate buffer (pH 6.5) containing 2 mM disodium ethylenediamine tetraacetate and 0.1 M sodium chloride, and a fraction corresponding to an initially-eluted peak was collected (Fab' fraction).
  • Separately, 5 mg of horse-radish derived peroxidase (TOYOBO Co., Ltd.; referred to as "POD") was dissolved in 0.1 M phosphate buffer (pH 7.0). To the mixture was added 4.0 mg of N-succinimidyl-4-(maleimidomethyl)cyclohexane-l-carboxylate in 50 µL of dimethylformamide, and the mixture was kept at 30°C for 60 min. The mixture was gel-filtrated with Sephadex G-25 column (Pharmacia) equilibrated with 0.05 M phosphate buffer (pH 6.5) containing 2 mM disodium ethylenediamine tetraacetate and 0.1 M sodium chloride, and a fraction corresponding to an initially-eluted peak was collected (pyridyldithio group-coupled POD fraction).
  • To the above Fab' fraction was added an equimolar amount of the pyridylthio group-coupled POD fraction, and the mixture was left at 4°C overnight. The mixture was gel-filtrated with S-200SF column equilibrated with 0.1 M phosphate buffer (pH 6.5) containing 0.1 M sodium chloride, and a fraction corresponding to an initially-eluted peak was collected (POD-labeled anti-hGH Fab' fraction). The fraction was treated with bovine serum albumin as a stabilizer at a level of 0.1 %, and stored at 4°C until use.
  • Exmaple 2: Antigen specificity of the MTC6A monoclonal antibody
  • The MTC6A monoclonal antibody obtained according to Example 1 was evaluated by an immunoassay for its antigen specificity. The antigens used were purified 20k hGH produced by gene recombination (JP-A 6-269292), and its analogous peptide hormones, human prolactin (referred to as "hPRL"; UCB BIOPRODUCTS) and human cilium somatomamotropin (referred to as "hCS"; CHEMICON). Each antigen was solidified on a 96-well microplate (Greiner) at an appropriate concentration (0 to 5000 ng/mL), and was then reacted with a solution of the MTC6A monoclonal antibody for evaluation. As a result, the MTC6A monoclonal antibody of this invention did not reacted with hPRL or hCS, analogous peptide hormones of hGH. The results are summarized in Table 1. Table 1:
    Antigen specificity of the MTC6A monoclonal antibody
    Antigen Reactivity
    20k hGH +
    hPRL -
    hCS -
    + : reactive
    - : nonreactive
  • Example 3: Reactivity of the MTC6A monoclonal antibody to 20k hGH and 22k hGH in a sandwich immunoassay
  • The MTC6A monoclonal antibody obtained according to Example 1 was evaluated for its reactivity to 20k hGH and 22k hGH. The MTC6A monoclonal antibody was diluted with PBS to 10 µg/mL, aliquots (50 µL) of the solution were poured to a 96-well microplate (Greiner), and the microplate was left at 4°C overnight. This plate was washed with washings (10 mM Tris-HCl buffer (pH: 8.0) containing 0.05 % Tween 20), and treated with blocking solution 2 (4-fold dilution of Block Ace (Yukijirushi) in PBS) for blocking. After blocking solution 2 was removed, to 48 of 96 wells and the other 48 wells were added aliquots (100 µL) of 20k hGH with an appropriate concentration (0 to 2 ng/mL) in blocking solution 2 and aliquots (100 µL) of 22k hGH (Genotropin; Sumitomo Pharm.) with an appropriate concentration (0 to 30 ng/mL) in blocking solution 2, respectively, and then shaken at room temperature for 2 hours. After washing the plate with above mentioned washings, to the wells were added aliquots (100 µL) of 500-fold dilution of the POD-labeled anti-hGH antibody Fab' fraction of Referential Example 1 in an antibody diluent (10-fold dilution of Block Ace (Yukijirushi) in PBS), and then the microplate was shaken at room temperature for 2 hours. After washing, to the wells were added aliquots (50 µL) of a substrate solution (0.04 % hydrogen peroxide containing 65 µg/mL of tetramethylbenzidin), and the plate was shaken at room temperature for 30 min. To the reaction solutions, aliquots (50 µL) of 1N sulfuric acid were added to quench the reaction, and absorbance at 450 nm was determined with Immunoreader (Nippon Intermed). The results are shown in Figure 1. The MTC6A monoclonal antibody did not react with 22k hGH even at 30 ng/mL which is higher than the normal blood level for 22k hGH, but reacted with 20k hGH at 10 pg/mL. Its cross-reactivity may be, therefore, estimated to be 0.03 %.
  • Example 4: Determination of 20k hGH in human blood with the MTC6A monoclonal antibody
  • 20k hGH in human blood was determined with the MTC6A monoclonal antibody. The MTC6A monoclonal antibody was diluted with PBS to 10 µg/mL, aliquots (50 µL) of the dilution were poured to a 96-well microplate (Greiner), and the plate was left at 4°C overnight. After washing this plate with washings (10mM Tris-HCl buffer (pH 8.0) containing 0.05 % Tween 20), it was blocked with blocking solution 2 (4-fold dilution of Block Ace (Yukijirushi) with PBS). After removing blocking solution 2, to the plate were added aliquots (100 µL) of a test solution prepared by mixing human serum with blocking solution 2 or blocking solution 2 containing 500 or 1000 pg of standard 20k hGH at ratio of 9:1, and the plate was shaken at room temperature for 2 hours. After washing with washings, to the plate were added aliquots (100 µL) of 500-fold dilution of the POD-labeled anti-hGH antibody Fab' fraction of Referential Example 1 in an antibody diluent (10-fold dilution of Block Ace (Yukijirushi) in PBS), and then the microplate was shaken at room temperature for 2 hours. After washing, to the plate were added aliquots (100 µL) of a substrate solution (0.1 % citrate-phosphate buffer (pH 5.0) containing 0.67 mg/mL of 1,2-phenylenediamine(DAKO)), and the plate was shaken at room temperature for 30 min. To the reaction solutions, aliquots (100 µL) of 1N sulfuric acid were added to quench the reaction, and absorbance at 490 nm was determined with Immunoreader (Nippon Intermed), to determine the level of 20k hGH by comparing with a calibration curve. The calibration curve had been developed by conducting determination as described above, using standard 20k hGH diluted with blocking solution 2 instead of the above test solution. Table 2 shows the values of the calibration curve and coefficients of variation in determination, and Table 3 shows the measured values for the test solution and the recoveries of 20k hGH added. Table 2:
    Calibration curve for 20k hGH
    20k hGH(pg/mL) 0 10 100 500 1000
    Average of mesured values (A490) 0.048 0.080 0.379 1.804 3.100
    Coefficient of variance (%) 7.4 6.5 4.9 4.1 11.1
    Table 3:
    Recovery of 20k hGH added
    Amount of 20k hGH added
    0 pg/mL 50 pg/mL 100 pg/mL
    Serum 1 A490 0.494 0.663 0.804
    Calculated value 129 pg/mL 177 pg/mL 217 pg/mL
    Recovery
    100 % 96 % 88 %
    Serum 2 A490 1.522 1.681 1.856
    Calculated value 421 pg/mL 466 pg/mL 516 pg/mL
    Recovery
    100 % 90 % 95 %
    Serum 3 A490 1.285 1.457 1.649
    Calculated value 353 pg/mL 402 pg/mL 457 pg/mL
    Recovery
    100 % 98 % 104 %
    In this invention, the use of any sequences (RNA or DNA), peptides, proteins, antibodies or amino acids includes the use of functional equivalents, substantially homologous molecules, or equivalent selectively hybridizable under e.g. high stringency conditions, or equivalents having deletions, substitutions, insertions or derivatives thereof which do not affect function.

Claims (10)

  1. A monoclonal antibody which is specifically reactive to a human growth hormone having a molecular weight of about 20000 (20k hGH) , but substantially unreactive to a human growth hormone having a molecular weight of about 22000 (22k hGH).
  2. A monoclonal antibody as claimed in Claim 1, having a cross-reactivity of 0.1 % and less to 22k hGH.
  3. A cell line producing the monoclonal antibody as claimed in Claim 1 or 2.
  4. A cell line as claimed in claim 3, which is obtained by a process comprising the following steps;
    (a) immunizing a mammal with 20k hGH;
    (b) fusing antibody-producing cells from the immunized mammal with myeloma cells to form hybridoma cells;
    (c) screening the hybridoma cells by an enzyme immunoassay; and
    (d) cloning the hybridoma cells selected by the screening; and optionally wherein the screening step c comprises the following sub-steps;
    (c-1) coupling an antibody reactive to a human growth hormone to an insoluble carrier to form an anti-hGH-antibody-coupled insoluble carrier;
    (c-2) coupling 20k hGH to the anti-hGH-antibody-coupled insoluble carrier to form an anti-hGH antibody - 20k hGH coupling product;
    (c-3) reacting the coupling product prepared in the above (c-2) with 20k hGH in the culture medium prepared by culturing the hybridoma cells obtained in the step (b) to form a complex of anti-hGH antibody-20k hGH - 20k hGH monoclonoal antibody;
    (c-4) counpling the complex obtained in the above (c-3) to an enzyme-labeled antibody to form a complex consisting of the antibody - 20k hGH - 20k hGH antibody complex-enzyme-labeled antibody; and
    (c-5) determining the enzyme activity using the complex obtained in the above (c-4), to select hybridoma cells based on the measurement results; and preferably which is hybridoma FERM BP-5913.
  5. A process for producing a monoclonal antibody comprising the step of culturing a cell line as claimed in claim 3 and purifying the monoclonal antibody which is specifically reactive to 20k hGH, but substantially unreactive to a human growth hormone having a molecular weight of about 22,000 (22k hHG) from the culture thus obtained.
  6. A process for preparing a monoclonal antibody which is specifically reactive.to 20k hGH, but substantially unreactive to 22k hGH, by culturing the cell line as claimed in Claim 4 and purifying the monoclonal antibody from the culture thus obtained.
  7. A monoclonal antibody which is producible by a cell line as cliamed any one of Claims 3-6.
  8. An immunoassay for 20k hGH using the monoclonal antibody as claimed in Claim 1 or 2.
  9. An immunoassay as claimed in Claim 8, wherein the immunoassay for 20k hGH is an enzyme immunoassay.
  10. An immunoassay as claimed in Claim 9, which is a sandwich enzyme immunoassay consisting of the following steps;
    (a) reacting a test solution containing a human growth hormone with a monoclonal-antibody-coupled insoluble carrier in which a monoclonal antibody which is specifically reactive to 20k hGH, but is substantially unreactive to 22k hGH is coupled to an insoluble carrier, to form a coupling product in which only 20k hGH is specifically coupled to the monoclonal-antibody-coupled insoluble carrier;
    (b) reacting the coupling product obtained in the above (a) with an anti-hGH enzyme-labeled antibody in which an antibody specifically reactive to a human growth hormone to form a sandwich complex of anti-20k hGH monoclonal antibody - 20k hGH - anti-hGH enzyme-labeled antibody on the monoclonal-antibody-coupled insoluble carrier; and
    (c) determining the activity of the enzyme used for labeling the sandwich complex obtained in the above step (b); and optionally which determines 20k hGH in human blood or human urine, or in its treated sample.
EP97304247A 1996-06-18 1997-06-17 Monoclonal antiboby specifically reactive to a human growth hormone with a molecular weight of about 20,000 for use in an immunoassay Withdrawn EP0814091A3 (en)

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Cited By (3)

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Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
EP0949509A1 (en) * 1998-03-30 1999-10-13 Mitsui Chemicals, Inc. A method of measurement of human growth hormone
DE102006009534A1 (en) * 2006-02-28 2007-08-30 Mediagnost Gesellschaft für Forschung und Herstellung von Diagnostika GmbH Method for preserving somatostatin in samples of body fluid, particularly for subsequent quantitative analysis, by applying and binding the sample to a carrier
ITMI20101068A1 (en) * 2010-06-11 2011-12-12 Ho P E S R L METHOD FOR DETERMINING SOMATOTROPAL ACTIVITY

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WO1997036929A1 (en) * 1996-03-29 1997-10-09 Pharmacia & Upjohn Ab MONOCLONAL ANTIBODIES BINDING HUMAN GROWTH HORMONE (hGH)

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JPS63273496A (en) 1987-05-01 1988-11-10 Sumitomo Pharmaceut Co Ltd Monoclonal antibody, hybridoma and measurement of human growth hormone
DE69318909T2 (en) 1992-09-09 1998-12-24 Mitsui Chemicals Inc Process for the production of human growth hormone
US5945296A (en) * 1996-03-29 1999-08-31 Pharmacia & Upjohn Ab Monoclonal antibody

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WO1997036929A1 (en) * 1996-03-29 1997-10-09 Pharmacia & Upjohn Ab MONOCLONAL ANTIBODIES BINDING HUMAN GROWTH HORMONE (hGH)

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MELLADO MARIO ET AL: "Characterization of monoclonal antibodies specific for the human growth hormone 22K and 20K isoforms." 1996 , JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ENDOCRINOLOGY & METABOLISM, VOL. 81, NR. 4, PAGE(S) 1613-1618 XP000983139 ISSN: 0021-972X * the whole document * *

Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
EP0949509A1 (en) * 1998-03-30 1999-10-13 Mitsui Chemicals, Inc. A method of measurement of human growth hormone
AU712583B1 (en) * 1998-03-30 1999-11-11 Schering Aktiengesellschaft A method of measurement of human growth hormone
DE102006009534A1 (en) * 2006-02-28 2007-08-30 Mediagnost Gesellschaft für Forschung und Herstellung von Diagnostika GmbH Method for preserving somatostatin in samples of body fluid, particularly for subsequent quantitative analysis, by applying and binding the sample to a carrier
ITMI20101068A1 (en) * 2010-06-11 2011-12-12 Ho P E S R L METHOD FOR DETERMINING SOMATOTROPAL ACTIVITY

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